UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The Bush administration and its allies revive their bid in the UN General Assembly on Monday to enact a global treaty banning all forms of human cloning, including research on cloning human cells.
The campaign, led by the United States and Costa Rica and backed by some predominantly Catholic nations, seeks to overturn a recent vote in the assembly's legal committee to defer consideration of the treaty until 2005.
The panel, which includes all UN members, voted 80 to 79 last month to postpone any debate on cloning for two years, virtually blocking the US-led initiative.
Encouraged by the one-vote margin, the United States and such key supporters as Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland, are confident they can get a majority if another vote is held.
Costa Rica's ambassador, Bruno Stagno, chairman of the anti-cloning coalition, introduced the draft resolution on Friday. It is on a crowded General Assembly agenda for late Monday but could be delayed until Tuesday.
Opponents of the US position, including Britain, France, Japan, and South Africa and more than 30 nations, want a partial ban that would prohibit cloning of human beings but allow the use of cells cloned from human embryos for research.
But supporters of a broad ban portray such "therapeutic" cloning as the taking of human lives.
The motion to postpone the negations in the legal committee was introduced by Iran on behalf of the 57-nation Organization of the Islamic Conference.
Islamic countries say they want more time to consider the issue. They have been more open to the practice of human cloning for medical purpose, as their religion does
not believe life begins at conception.
Some diplomats said a compromise might yet emerge, to defer drafting of the treaty for one year rather than two.
The US anti-abortion movement is lobbying strongly for the total ban while
many scientist want the right to pursue therapeutic cloning.
Washington's approach would ban "effort to use cloned embryonic stem cells to try and generate healthy tissues, or to treat degenerative diseases such as
Parkinson's," said Alan Leshner, who heads the American Association for the Advancement of Science and is executive publisher of its journal, Science.
The US Congress is also divided over stem cell research and so far has failed to adopt legislation regulating it. |